Monday, June 10, 2019

Send Her On Down, Lord!

"When the day of Pentecost had come, the apostles were all together in one place.  And suddenly from heaven there came a sound like the rush of a violent wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting.  Divided tongues, as of fire, appeared among them, and a tongue rested on each of them.  All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages, as the Spirit gave them ability."
--Acts 1: 1-4


When was the last time you went to a family reunion?  Where I come from in the mountains of Virginia family reunions happened, it seemed, every year.  I found that a little strange; I mean, how can you miss someone if they never go away?  But the flip side of that was my own family, who had a reunion in 1989when I was five years oldand didnt have another one until this past April!  As I said to one of my cousins, whom I dont even remember being at that first reunion30 years is way, way too long to be away from your family!

The Epps family reunited for the first time in 30 years back in April.

Do you know what is even worse than 30 years?  2200 years!  Thats about how long it took for humanity to have its family reunion.  In an attempt to explain why the world is the way that it is, the Scriptures of the Hebrew peoplewritten while those folks were scattered in exile throughout the empire of Babylonoffered an explanation for the phenomenon of why people speak different languages.  According to the Book of Genesis (chapter 11, verses 1-9), humanity once spoke a common language around the time of the reign of a king named Nimrod, who ruled over 2000 before the time of Jesus.  According to the story humanity got a little big for its britches, and built a great city called Babel, in which was a tower that was erected in the sky in order to make a name for ourselves.  God didnt like this, and the result was the destruction of the tower and humanitys hubris repaid in the form of different languages that caused confusion and frustration of all kinds.  The human family was scattered to the winds following the destruction of Babel.

An artist's rendering of the city and tower of Babel.

But they wouldnt stay that way.  Nope.  God had other ideas.  It took a while22 centuries, give or takebut a new wind was about to blow and reunite the human family.  On that day of Pentecost, a holy day for the Hebrew people, God showed up once more, but not to punish or chide or confuse the people.  No, this time God showed up to bring the people together.  A mighty wind blew through the upper room of a house in Jerusalem. A small bind of brothers and sisters, still caught in a place of fear and confusion, like the people were when Babel fell, were caught up in that wind, which was the very breath of God.  Tongues of fire rested on their headscommon tonguesand the Spirit of God drove them out into the streets to preach about the loving, liberating, and life-giving God that they had come to know through the teachings of their friend and rabbi, Jesus of Nazareth.  And in that moment, as they preached and men and women from all cultures and languages heard them speaking in their native tongue, confusion ceased.  Fear was abated.  God showed up.  The gift of universally intelligible languages was Gods practical joke undoing the Babel event.  The reunion was on! 

The fresco of a church ceiling depicting the Day of Pentecost.

Now, yall know how family reunions go.  Theres a feast, a catching up with one another, and a promise that is always made to stay in touch, to not let so much time go by, and theres almost always one member of the family who is tasked with making sure this happens, isnt there? A dutiful aunt who keeps the phone numbers or email lists, and every now and then sends out something to the rest of the family to make sure nobody loses that connection.  Often times that auunt is the one who hosted the reunion and prepared the feast, am I right?  In the case of Pentecost that aunt, that member of the family who orchestrates the whole thing, is the Holy Spirit, and it is she who makes sure nobody loses the connection from that day forward.  For the rest of the book of Acts, the Holy Spirit is so significant that she might as well be considered the main character of the whole book!  Its the Spirit who initiates the baptism of the Ethiopian eunuch, an outsider for both his racial and sexual identities.  It's the Spirit that facilitates the conversions of Paul and Cornelius.  Its the Spirit that compels the followers of Jesus to include Gentilesnon-Jews who had been excluded from the family of Godin their new community of faith.  Its the Spiritthe same Spirit that conceived, empowered, and guided Jesuswho has drives those frightened and confused folks into the streets to reunite the whole human family. 

But about that dutiful aunt: she can be a little pushy, cant she?  She might be the family member who is always getting us out of our comfort zones, telling us we are more than we think we are, that we are strong and beautiful.  And to be sure, the Holy Spirit is pushy.  She is the storm, the wind that blows through and disturbs us, takes us out of the shelter and comfort of our upper rooms and into the dangerous world to stand in the courageous power of the love of God.  This past week I have thought a lot about the Holy Spirit and her power to move people, to inspire people, to unite people.  

When a tyrant dared say that a whole population of the human family were like vermin that needed to be exterminated, the Holy Spirit moved men and women into action, and 75 years ago this past week on a beach called Omaha, they courageously stormed like the wind and fire of the Spirit to remind everyone of the unity of the human family and Gods dream of justice and dignity for every member.  

Soldiers charge Omaha Beach on D-Day, June 6, 1944.

And fifty years ago this month, another small group of people huddled in fear at a bar called Stonewall went out into another set of city streets and proclaimed to those who had denied their dignity that they would no longer be silenced and abused, and led by the Spirit, they took pride in the inherent beauty and strength that God had given them. We honor that pride with which they took to the streets as we too march and proclaim Gods dream of equality for the whole human family.  The Spirit may be pushy, but she is the wind that blows over and transforms this dusty old world.

A march takes place after the Stonewall Riots in June, 1969.

She is still moving, brothers and sisters.  She is still comforting the afflicted and afflicting the comfortable.  She is still calling men and women to go into the dangerous places and to proclaim freedom, hope, and justice for Gods people.  Three weeks ago at the Festival of Homiletics in Minneapolis, The Rev. William Barber declared to a room of about 2000 preachers that we need another Pentecost.  We need, he said, to speak in tongues, the tongues from heaven, the tongues that society doesnt always speak with, and declare that the Spirit is still moving.  And in those places where the Spirit is moving the rejected are not longer afraid, and the people of God all go out together and speak against the idolatrous culture that seeks to make a name for themselves by way of power, prestige, and possessions. The Churchwith a big Cthat was born on that Day of Pentecost, was born of the Spirit that blew through that day, and the Church must lead people who are born of that Spirit into a way of being that is grounded in the work of hope, justice, and lovework that is cooperative between us and God.  

The Greek scholar Preston Epps, my great-grandfather and the person in whose honor my family gathered for that reunion in April, once wrote that Christianity, for him, boiled down to this: ““God and humanity extend to each other in the cooperative enterprise of humanity becoming as like as possible to the God portrayed in the Gospels. The Spirit makes this enterprise possible.

My great-grandfather, Dr. Preston H. Epps.

So my prayer for you is the prayer that Rev. Barber ended our time with at that conference three weeks ago:  Send her on down, Lord!  Send the Holy Spirit on down to us today and everyday!  Lead us out into our streets, into a new Pentecostal movement, a movement born of the Spirit.  Let us be empowered by Jesus to repair the breaches, to reunite the human family to seek justice, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with our God.  Send the Spirit on down, Lord!  Send her on down! 

1 comment: